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Teams: Softball: Schedule & Results
JUMBOS STAY ALIVE IN NCAA'S WITH 4-0 VICTORY OVER TEXAS-TYLER
COLLEGE SOFTBALL FINAL SCORE
NCAA Championship Round
Tufts 4, Texas-Tyler 0
Game Box Score
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Casey Sullivan's two-run shot to center gave
Tufts all the runs they would need
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MONTCLAIR, N.J. -- Making a name for themselves and the New England
Region at the 2009 NCAA Division 3 Softball Championships, the Tufts
University Jumbos are now one of the final four teams playing after a
solid 4-0 victory over the University of Texas at Tyler in an
elimination game at Montclair State University on Sunday afternoon.
The Jumbos (44-2) will get right back at it on Sunday night at 7:30
pm in another elimination game against Gustavus Adolphus. The winner
will move on to the loser's bracket final to be played on Monday at
noon. Texas-Tyler finished its season with a 39-10 record.
The Jumbos defeated UT Tyler at their own game on Sunday. Tufts hit
two home runs against the Patriots, who entered the weekend ranked first
in the NCAA Division 3 statistics with 53 home runs this season. Tufts
sophomore Izzie Santone (Madison, CT) blanked the powerful
Patriots on four hits and has not allowed an earned run in two
complete-game victories at the NCAA Championships.
Playing as the home team, UT Tyler got a two-out double down the left
field line by first-year Ashley Klores in the first. Sophomore RF
Whitney Wyly, the NCAA leader in RBI per game at 1.64, walked, but
Santone struck out senior 1B Kate Bell to end the inning.
Tufts got on the board in the top of the second. Senior RF Maya
Ripecky (Chicago, IL), who had two hits in the game and leads the
Jumbos with four for the weekend, singled to lead off. With one out,
junior shortstop Casey Sullivan (Berlin, CT) hit a home over the
eight-foot fence in center field and the Jumbos led 2-0.
A Tufts error, their first of the Championships, did not come back to
haunt them in the third. Moving to the fourth, Ripecky was again on base
with a single when first-year 1B Lena Cantone (Southington, CT)
blasted a home run down the right field line to put Tufts up 4-0. The
Jumbos had runners on second and third with two outs later in the
inning, but could not add on to their lead.
Santone and the Tufts defense, meanwhile, were negating Patriot base
runners effectively. In the bottom of the fourth, Tufts had a Sullivan
to Danielle Lopez (Danvers, MA) to Cantone double play after a
lead-off walk to Wyly. Following a lead-off single by Patriots junior SS Amanda
Busby in the fifth, Santone retired the next three hitters in a row. In
the sixth, Wyly was on again with a one-out single, but a double play
grounder from senior 3B Samantha Kuhles (Somerville, NJ) to Lopez
to Cantone ended the inning.
Singles by Jumbos Alison Drobiarz (Old Saybrook, CT) and
Cara Hovhanessian (Farmington, CT) did not amount to a run in the
Tufts fifth, and they went down 1-2-3 in the sixth and seventh off
Patriots reliever Lauren Scruggs. However, Santone, who allowed just two
Patriots to reach second base in the game, rolled to her shutout victory
with a 1-2-3 seventh. She improved to 21-1 on the season, finishing with
two walks and a strike out.
"(Santone) did a great job," Texas-Tyler coach Mike Reed said. "She
changed speeds, kept the ball down and didn't make any mistakes. When
you have hitters like ours, part of our success is getting mistakes and
capitalizing on those. She didn't make a lot of mistakes today."
Tufts, who on Friday became the first New England region team to win
a game at the NCAA Championships since 2004 with their 3-1 final against
Cortland State, tripled the total of New England region wins (3) at the
Championships this decade with the win over UT Tyler. The Jumbos lost a
tight 1-0 game to Coe College on Saturday evening.
Tufts coach Cheryl Milligan altered the batting order against UT
Tyler and it paid dividends with a nine-hit attack. Drobiarz, making her
first start of the weekend, joined Sullivan and Ripecky with two hits.
Both Tufts taters came off UT Tyler starter Stacy Shepherd.
"Our bats came alive," Milligan said. "We felt like we really didn't
do our job at the plate last night (against Coe), and we knew we could
do better. Last night, we talked about being a little bit tight, but
today we swung a lot better than we did yesterday. A lot more like we
are capable of doing. That's the kind of power we have. We didn't have
as many base hits as we are used to getting, but we swung the bats
better in key situations."
The Tufts defense, which is fielding .990 in three games at the
Championships, has really turned heads.
"Our defense was great (today)," Santone said. "There was one inning
where I walked the first batter, and 90 percent of the time that you
walk the leadoff hitter, that runner scores. As a pitcher, it is great
to know that if you give up a hard ground ball up the middle, your
defense can turn it into a double play. It really helps you as a
pitcher. It's great to know that little mistakes like that can be
covered by your defense."
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